TRAVELING EXHIBITION
 
The Museum of Russian Art (TMORA) is pleased to present the traveling
exhibition Photographer to the Tsar: Revealing the Silk Road.  This
extraordinary exhibition features 26 color photographs of the Russian
Empirešs portion of the Silk Road that were taken shortly before Russiašs
1917 Revolution by Sergei M. Prokudin-Gorskii (1863-1944), artist, scientist
and pioneer in the field of color photography. Using a camera of his own
design, Prokudin-Gorskii traveled to Turkestan in 1906 and 1911, documenting
legendary sites and contemporary life thriving amidst the ruins of ancient
towns at the heart of the fabled Silk Road.
 
The Silk Road spanned thousands of miles, connecting East and West,
stretching from China and India to Central Asia, Afghanistan and the
Mediterranean Sea. Caravans of camels transported rare spices, aromatic
teas, richly colored textiles, precious Chinese porcelain, gold, and
gunpowder to cities in Asia and Europe.  A land of ancient oases and
sunburnt deserts, Central Asia was added to the Russian Empire in the
mid-19th century through conquest and annexation. Russiašs southern
expansion into Turkestan in the 1860s occurred during the same decade it
sold Alaska to the United States. Abandoning the seemingly barren northern
regions of Alaska, the Russian Empire expanded its reach to the bountiful
gardens and cotton fields of Central Asia.
 
In order to examine the newly acquired lands in the south, Tsar Nicolas II
supported the work of Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii, a Russian chemist and
photographer who was conducting a photographic survey of the vast Russian
Empire. Traveling in a specially equipped railroad car, Prokudin-Gorskii
journeyed to the historic settlements at the heart of the Silk Road
including Samarkand, Bukhara, Khiva, and Merv.  His images of Khans and
prisoners, beggars and merchants, crumbling mosques and burgeoning industry,
Uzbek town-dwellers and nomadic Kyrgyz, capture the rich diversity of the
peoples and cultures along the Silk Road. Taken in the nascent years of
photography, Prokudin-Gorskiišs color images are of unprecedented quality
and document this era with striking precision and clarity.

The exhibition images are displayed in individual custom-made light boxes
fitted with wooden frames that are illuminated in a manner that recreates
Prokudin-Gorskiišs technique of using light to enhance his photographs. The
captivating images of this exhibition offer a unique and vivid view of the
art, culture and history of late Imperial Russia and Central Asia, as well
as the history of photography.
 
This beautiful exhibition was featured in the December 2009 issue of Art and
Antiques.    
 
Installation photos of both exhibitions are available on TMORAšs FTP site at
http://ftp2.tmora.org  (Username: traveling; Password: exhibits). Didactics
are available upon request.
 
For more information, contact Lana Gendlin Brooks, Director of Operations,
at [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> .
The Museum of Russian Art/5500 Stevens Ave. South, Minneapolis, MN 55419
www.tmora.org <http://www.tmora.org>
612-821-9045
 
 


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